All the carriers have deals right now. I think you can get an XR for basically free now with a plan.
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Fair enough. If you don't mind paying for it, and plan to keep it for a long time, the Pros are a little better even for day-to-day stuff. They are also more fragile though, at least with the current style - they are too thin IMHO.
The old mini was brutal - had you bought one in the last 1-2 years they were basically unusable right from new compared to the typical Apple performance standard. The 4th generation hadn't been updated since 2013/2014 and it was somehow more expensive than a brand new 9.7" with modern hardware. The 5th iteration brought a desperately needed update and more reasonable pricing.
Yea I feel like the mini was a missed mark for a lot of years. I’m sure Apple knows best in terms of marketing and customer demands but I always loved the size, but was always annoyed by it being an obvious second fiddle to the big one.
Even now, an iPad Pro shrunk into a mini form factor would be awesome.
...n/m
Someone posted a used iPhone 7 Plus on our intranet for 700$ :zzz: good luck with that.
Hoping they stepped up the megapixel count of the sensor with the new tri camera setup sometimes in really low light my pics look like trash compared to a S10+
Lol, you can buy an 8 plus or XR for less than that on Kijiji.
You don't want them to raise the MP count if low light is your issue, it will be even worse if they shrink the pixels to cram in more resolution at the expense of light gathering ability.
The bigger problem is Apple doesn't have a competitive HDR/image stacking algorithm and doesn't even offer something like Night Sight, both of which massively improve low light photos on smartphones provided the subject isn't moving too fast. Night Sight is a fairly simple principle (longer exposures + image stacking + AI white balance), but it's a game changer in that department.
Apple is 2-3 generations behind now on their camera tech (a big part of which is on the computational photography side), so they have a huge gap to close if they want the iPhone 11's to be competitive in that department - just adding more cameras to the back doesn't help if they don't have the rest of it figured out. They obviously aren't bad at all, but that is one area they are way behind in compared to the Android world.
Whoops, yeah larger sensor, not pixel count**
Bit of an exaggeration there haha. Yea google is better in some situations, Apple in others, but the gap closes when you add in post processing. It’s basically how iPhones default process a warmer and less shadowy image while pixels default to a cooler more sharply processed image. It depends what you’re after. Yes pixel is better at night because of stacking, but it’s not as big of a gap as default processing once iPhone night shots are post processed. Kenny and I did side by side tests when he got his Pixel 3. Pixel’s software zoom is nice if there’s no motion, but still doesn’t compare to a true optical zoom. Videos, no contest when you can’t apply any of the stacking so pixel gets destroyed.
Anyways, pros and cons on both, but 2-3 generations behind is laughable.
I dunno, Apple has nothing that even comes close to Night Sight. I don't think it's an exaggeration. Also, what percentage of smartphone shooters are post-processing their photos beyond adding an Instagram filter? I know you and I might, but I've got to believe the number of people doing that is extremely low. Unless you are collecting multiple identical RAW images and stacking them in post (not a super easy thing to do), you aren't getting close to Night Sight.
If you're willing to process a bunch of RAW files manually with the proper software, well then yeah all bets are off, but 99% people don't use their camera phones like that. That's also extremely inconvenient and time consuming.
iVerge has a few articles on it and they seem to agree, despite their extremely pro-apple sentiment everywhere else: https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/3/18...el-competition
Another quote from them "Still, if the iPhone XS could even match last year’s Pixel 2 in basic image quality, it’d be a significant and immediately noticeable improvement for every iPhone user." And that is with basic photos, not Night Sight.
Anyway, I am obviously not the only person to think this way if other Apple fanboys agree. And like I said, it is by no means bad, it's just pretty far behind at least at the current juncture - the 11's might close some of the gap.
I'm willing to reduce it to 1-2 generations :angel: Also, a one-generation difference is not big - it sounds worse than it is. Night Sight was a bit of a game changer but before that, honestly the year-over-year improvements in both camps have been quite minor.
When there's major features they don't have in the areas of photography that the average user complains about the most (like blurry or noisy pics in low light), that puts them more than a little behind at least IMO.
The way I understand it, your point seems to be that if you process RAW files you can get similar results from an iPhone, which is true because that is all the Pixel is doing too - computational photography. The difference is one happens instantly inside your phone, and the other requires manual post processing of up to 15 identical RAW files and the appropriate knowledge and software to do so. Your average smartphone user just wants to press the button and get better photos, especially in low light. Night sight deals with movement surprisingly well, but if there is major movement then you will run into problems.
We are nitpicking, because if you just care about getting a semi-usable photo in most scenarios, well any phone in the last 5 years or so can deliver on that. Now that smartphones are starting to replace traditional cameras more and more, and prices can easily approach $1500-$2000, the little things start to matter more.
I do suspect Apple will have a version of Night Sight on the 11's.
No, my point is that out of the box performance is close (except for very low light). It's what you favor as the default processing. Some like the cooler look of Pixel photos with more shadow and higher sharpening detail, and others like the warmer studio like look of the iPhone's default processing. I only mention processing in that you get the same results either way. Don't get me wrong, some of the technological advances on the Pixel is great, such as the digital zoom using stacking. It's a great way to increase profit margins by not needing to pack it with a optical zoom lens. It works, and works great. End result is the same anyways.
Watching the Apple Event; Apple TV+ will come in as 1 year free subscription if you buy an apple product today. Good marketing so far lol.
Nothing that blows my mind for the iPhone so far. Wish they had changed the shape around more.